Frem Here To Awesome Festival
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"Waiting for Berlin Alexanderplatz"
Personal statement:

I've always craved some balance of danger and diplomacy and I accept that the world I was born into was violent and often deranged. 

What I look for in cinema is precisely that strangeness I've always know to be true. Not that normalcy and happiness and grace don't exist, but some shadow blocked it from view. I suppose my world followed a different star than most: German, cold people, broken people haunted by griefs, dead people, Poe characters, zombies.

A Herzog world. A Tarkovsky world. Never proud enough to really be Bergman characters, never really wanting to shine, never human enough to break through doubt.

I was born of doubters, people who thought themselves hopeless before some tragic circumstance. And so I like the things I like for all my own reasons. Gummo made me cry for joy, watching that boy eat that candy bar in the bath while his mom washed his hair. That's what love feels like. I suppose I'm a mama's boy.

I want movies to thrill me emotionally. I want to be riveted. I want to be moved with recognition. I want the anarchy of Godard and the petulance of  Fassbinder. There is so much European cinema to see! I can't wait as things become available. I watched every Bunuel film I could get my hands on for no good reason. I can't say I figured it all out, but I gave it a shot and liked a lot of it. That great one where no one can leave the room, what's it called... hold on....

The Exterminating Angel

 

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quint's movie tags

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Public domain
By quint in An inordinate number of peppers
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"There are so many great public domain videos on Google video. " [More]

Re:Where to watch free movies
By quint in Free Movies
"Just saw this one: Lycos Cinema. Interesting setup. Lots of classics. " [More]
German after all
By quint in An inordinate number of peppers
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
"My father's side of my family is German. They came to America in the late 19th century, looking for work and opportunity in the furniture trade. My great great grandfather was a cabinet maker and an otherwise successful future was cut short by tragedy in 1929 when my great grandfather, an only child, was killed in a night club fire in Detroit just one month before the stock market crash. He left one son behind, my grandfather, and that narrow thread leads to me. I've spent a good deal of time at the library trying to reconnect with these roots. To understand the patterns of thought in my own mind. It's a romantic dream I suppose. The stories handed down to me feel more like legends than truths. Among them is the fact that an ancestor of mine was once the burgermeister of Baden-Baden. My grandfather was supposedly among the first to cross the bridge into Baden-Baden, liberating that town with the Third Army. He shot a Nazi officer and took a French police pistol off his ... " [More]
So far so great
By quint in An inordinate number of peppers
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"So, I'm only two episodes into the series, but I feel compelled to wite about it already. I love Heimat. I am so glad that I have a lot of episodes ahead of me. The subtle characterisations, the dense and lovable characters, the people's history of a very traumatic time. Fascinating and important. " [More]
Re:Expanding Horizons; The Wide ...
By quint in The Film Library
"When I was a kid, I was so geeked about Gremlins that I read the novelization. It was a desperate sort of nostaligia for the movie experience that provoked it. A novelization was the closest thing to being able to watch the movie whenever I wanted. I think technology has solved the need for instant nostalgia. If I like a movie or show, I can probably catch clips on Google video or YouTube to share with friends or tweak my memory. What this says about the future of memory is intriguing to me. " [More]
Frickin' giant geode
By quint in An inordinate number of peppers
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"I really liked watching this. I got a real kick out of the giant geode their laser rock zapper train fell into. I thought that the wireframe of a diamond the size of Cape Cod was very convincing. This film was cleverly constructed. It threw me back to the choice days of Ray Harryhausen's imaginative audacity. And it was dumb sometimes, which was awesome. " [More]
I know this movie sucks but...
By quint in An inordinate number of peppers
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"Stripped of all it's dumb story line and viewed just for the underwater cave photography, this is a beautiful movie. The characters are weak, blah blah blah. But man, those are real caves (except for the chambers with the fire and the ice and the blah blah blah). It is unfortunate that the underwater photography has to be couched in such silly trappings. I would gladly watch endless hours of the explorations.That has everything to do with Wes Skiles who handled the underwater camera. His work here is completely amazing. If you want a good claustrophobic cave story, of course watch The Descent. It is a far better movie in nearly every way. But if you love caves, you have to check this out. " [More]
Buggin
By quint in An inordinate number of peppers
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"Like many people, I thought Bug was a horror movie, but I was pleasantly surprised that it wasn't. Instead, this is an intriguing psychological study of the illusions we'll endure for the promise of love. The movie that comes to mind is Richard Linklater's Tape. It is perhaps just the off-Broadway feel. Night of the Living Dead has a similar economy. Ashley Judd is excellent, but the movie's main flaw is with her character. There is not enough to convince me of her desperation. Sure, she is a white trash woman with a lot to regret, but her endurance is what I am most convinced of. Harry Connick, Jr. is more Tony Franciosa than ever. He is a wicked thug. Michael Shannon is a pleasant surprise.After the set up, the movie changes character significantly, but never quite outlives it's pretenses. Craziness kicks into high gear out of the blue. Harry Connick's character falls by the wayside. The climax has to come because all sympathy is blasted from the character ... " [More]
Sodom and Gamorrah for children?
By quint in An inordinate number of peppers
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"Krysar is a masterpiece of Czech stop-motion animation. It's a dark interpretation of the story of the Pied Piper of Hamlin done with an ingenious variety of carved wooden figures and rats, both live and artificial. The synopsis suggests that this is for children, but it includes the gang rape and murder of a maiden and various other brutalities. The techniques used to make this film are masterful. The villagers are busily exploiting one another. The rats are inspired by these actions. The rats are very much the dark forces inside the people. The pied piper is a sort of angelic force come down to purge the village of it's greed and decadence. When eliminating the rats only leads to a continuance of the same exploitive behavior, the pied piper purges the village of its human rats as well. Sodom and Gamorrah.If you appreciate the films of the Brothers Quay or Jan Svankmajer, then you should really check out Jiri Barta.I watched this on the DVD Labyrinths of Darkness which i ... " [More]
Premieres exclusively on iTunes
By quint in An inordinate number of peppers
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"Here's an interesting development: “Purple Violets” premieres exclusively on iTunes " [More]
Mother Courage
By quint in An inordinate number of peppers
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"Jupiter's Wife is a very lo-fi movie. Michel Negroponte is the type of documentary filmmaker whose work is an extremely personal labor of love. He reminds me of Doug Block. The subject is a homeless woman living in central park. The pretense is that she is like Robin Williams in the Fisher King. The journey is to unravel what appears to be her psychosis. Negroponte does an excellent job of peering beneath the surface to see the woman inside her, led down the garden path by circumstances, left to fend for herself. A tough woman. I never once felt like she couldn't handle her situation. Her fantasies were how she handled it. So they are necessary until (through Negroponte's intervention) her circumstance improves. She gets to unravel the physical traumas and psychological traumas to find she is just a strong woman in unfortunate conditions. A sort of Mother Courage.The production is very primitive, but the story is captured. I admire what Negroponte has done here and am ... " [More]

Lists

Films I've seen (2867)
Films I've seen
Films I want to see (515)
Films I want to see
Films I want to buy (5)
Films I want to buy
Films I own (133)
Films I own
Abandon hope (4)
These films have each in their own way become a rite of passage, in the sense that after seeing ...
The guise of wisemen (25)
There were longer hours in our sorrows. We sang it to the hills ourselves in time. We learned ho ...
poets on film (11)
Sometimes the best inspiration is to watch another person act like an idiot. Here are some of my ...